Cotes de Provence AOCGrenache, Cinsault, Tibouren, SyrahEUR 14-18 retail
The entry rose of Chateau Minuty, a pale dry Provençal pink built on Grenache and Cinsault with Tibouren for southern aromatic lift. The reference value rose under twenty euros, broadly available in supermarkets and wine shops alike.
Tip: M de Minuty is the supermarket play; trade up to the slate-bottle Prestige cuvee at the cellar for a step up that still stays comfortably under twenty-five euros.
Coteaux d'Aix-en-Provence AOCGrenache, Syrah, CinsaultEUR 16-22 retail
AIX is the flagship rose of Maison Saint Aix, a 75-hectare Coteaux d'Aix estate built on Grenache, Syrah and Cinsault on limestone with mistral exposure. Pale, dry and saline, a serious entry to Aix rose for under twenty-five euros.
Tip: The magnum is the bottle to look for; AIX Rose holds its freshness across a long lunch and the larger format slows the chill loss on a terrace.
Coteaux Varois en Provence AOCGrenache, Syrah, CinsaultEUR 12-16 retail
Chateau Routas's Coteaux Varois rose is the easy-drinking value play from the cooler inland Var, built on Grenache and Syrah with a splash of Cinsault. Pale, dry and freshly fruited at an everyday price, well under twenty euros.
Tip: Coteaux Varois sits at slightly higher altitude than the coastal AOCs, so the rose tends to hold acidity better; serve well chilled with grilled fish.
Cotes de Provence AOCGrenache, Cinsault, Mourvedre, SyrahEUR 15-20 retail
The entry rose of Chateau Leoube, an organic Cotes de Provence estate on the seaward coast at Bormes-les-Mimosas. Pale, citrus-driven and dry, the affordable expression of the estate's certified-organic Cotes de Provence rose at under twenty euros.
Tip: Look for the Secret de Leoube; the higher-priced La Londe and Rose de Leoube cuvees climb fast but the entry bottling carries the same organic-farming pedigree.
Cotes de Provence Cru ClasseGrenache, Cinsault, Syrah, RolleEUR 18-25 retail
Symphonie is the Cru Classe entry rose of Chateau Sainte Marguerite, a 1955-classified Cotes de Provence estate at La Londe. Pale, fresh and structured at twenty to twenty-five euros, the most affordable way into Provence's Cru Classe roster.
Tip: The Sainte Marguerite Symphonie is sold at most French wine merchants; ask for the magnum format if you can find it for the same wine with slower ageing in bottle.
Cotes de Provence Sainte-Victoire AOCGrenache, Cinsault, SyrahEUR 14-19 retail
Mas de Cadenet farms on the limestone foothills beneath Mont Sainte-Victoire and bottles a Cotes de Provence Sainte-Victoire rose that captures the cooler-night signature of the sub-appellation. Dry, savoury and tense at under twenty euros.
Tip: The Sainte-Victoire sub-AOC sits at higher altitude than the coastal Cotes de Provence; the resulting rose is a touch leaner and longer-lived than the Saint-Tropez style.